An Essay on the Pronunciation of the Greek LanguageJ. Murray, 1844 - 309 sider |
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Side 135
... Vossius lays it down that the word ἀνόρουσε should be avo- ροῦσε , and πολύχαλκον should be πολυχάλκον ; and in support of his position , after citing some au- thors whose works are not now extant , he goes on : " Sed et ex iis , qui ...
... Vossius lays it down that the word ἀνόρουσε should be avo- ροῦσε , and πολύχαλκον should be πολυχάλκον ; and in support of his position , after citing some au- thors whose works are not now extant , he goes on : " Sed et ex iis , qui ...
Side 136
... Vossius , that his rule is just the reverse ; for his statement that these words have the accent on the antepenultimate , must mean that they have it by usage , or in other words , that they ought to have it . It is true , he adds as a ...
... Vossius , that his rule is just the reverse ; for his statement that these words have the accent on the antepenultimate , must mean that they have it by usage , or in other words , that they ought to have it . It is true , he adds as a ...
Side 138
... Vossius and other writers have since done ? Instead of this he points out some particular words which in Homer's time had a different accent from that which they bore later ; from which we may infer that in the words of which he makes ...
... Vossius and other writers have since done ? Instead of this he points out some particular words which in Homer's time had a different accent from that which they bore later ; from which we may infer that in the words of which he makes ...
Side 139
... Vossius apply to words having in the penultimate a diphthong or a long vowel , and the question has been , whether they should have an acute on the antepenultimate or a cir- cumflex on the penultimate . Vossius has cited no authority ...
... Vossius apply to words having in the penultimate a diphthong or a long vowel , and the question has been , whether they should have an acute on the antepenultimate or a cir- cumflex on the penultimate . Vossius has cited no authority ...
Side 149
George James Pennington. both , may be different in prose and in verse . Vossius indeed directly asserts this , " Omnino necesse est aliter in prosa , aliter in carmine so- nuisse vocabula . " ( De Poematum Cantu , & c . p.32 . ) And ...
George James Pennington. both , may be different in prose and in verse . Vossius indeed directly asserts this , " Omnino necesse est aliter in prosa , aliter in carmine so- nuisse vocabula . " ( De Poematum Cantu , & c . p.32 . ) And ...
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2d Edition accent and quantity accentual marks acute accent ancient Apollonius arsis and thesis Athenæus Attic authority barytone circumflex cited cloth corruption Dionysius diphthong enclitic English Engravings expression Gally give grammarians grave grave accent Greece Greek accents Greek language Henninius Herodian History Homer HOWITT Illustrations instance J. C. LOUDON lable last syllable Latin lay the accent learned letter long syllable manner manuscripts metre mode modern Greeks nature nounced observed oxytone paroxytone passage penultimate Plates poetry poets post 8vo Primatt probably pronounced pronunciation proparoxytone prose Quinctilian rhythm rule says scholars seems short syllable sound suppose Thucydides tion TREATISE trisyllables verse Vignette Titles vols Vossius vowels Woodcuts writers γὰρ δὲ διὰ εἰς ἐν ἐπὶ καὶ κατὰ μὲν οἱ οἷον ὀξύνεται οὐ περὶ τὰ τε τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῖς τὸν τοῦ τῷ τῶν ὡς